New Treatments
for Neurodegenerative Diseases
In a host of neurological diseases,
including multiple sclerosis (MS) and several neuropathies,
the protective covering surrounding the nerves - an
insulating material called myelin - is damaged. Scientists
at the Weizmann Institute of Science have now discovered
an important new line of communication between nervous
system cells that is crucial to the development of myelinated
nerves - a discovery that may aid in restoring the normal
function of the affected nerve fibers.
Nerve cells (neurons) have long, thin extensions called
axons that can reach up to a meter and or more in length.
Often, these extensions are covered by myelin, which
is formed by a group of specialized cells called glia.
Glial cells revolve around the axon, laying down the
myelin sheath in segments, leaving small nodes of exposed
nerve in between. More than just protection for the
delicate axons, the myelin covering allows nerve signals
to jump instantaneously between nodes, making the transfer
of these signals quick and efficient. When myelin is
missing or damaged, the nerve signals can't skip properly
down the axons, leading to abnormal function of the
affected nerve and often to its degeneration.
In research published recently in
Nature Neuroscience, Weizmann Institute scientists Prof.
Elior Peles, graduate student Ivo Spiegel and their
colleagues in the Molecular Cell Biology Department
and in the United States, have now provided a vital
insight into the mechanism by which glial cells recognize
and myelinate axons.
How do the glial cells and the axon
coordinate this process? The Weizmann Institute team
found a pair of proteins that pass messages from axons
to glial cells. These proteins, called Necl1 and Necl4,
belong to a larger family of cell adhesion molecules,
so called because they sit on the outer membranes of
cells and help them to stick together. Peles and his
team discovered that even when removed from their cells,
Necl1, normally found on the axon surface, and Necl4,
which is found on the glial cell membrane, adhere tightly
together. When these molecules are in their natural
places, they not only create physical contact between
axon and glial cell, but also serve to transfer signals
to the cell interior, initiating changes needed to undertake
myelination.
The scientists found that production
of Necl4 in the glial cells rises when they come into
close contact with an unmyelinated axon, and as the
process of myelination begins. They observed that if
Necl4 is absent in the glial cells, or if they blocked
the attachment of Necl4 to Necl1, the axons that were
contacted by glial cells did not myelinate. In the same
time period, myelin wrapping was already well under
way around most of the axons in the control group.
"What we've discovered is a
completely new means of communication between these
nervous system cells," says Peles. "The drugs
now used to treat MS and other degenerative diseases
in which myelin is affected, can only slow the disease,
but not stop or cure it. Today, we can't reverse the
nerve damage caused by these disorders. But if we can
understand the mechanisms that control the process of
wrapping the axons by their protective sheath, we might
be able to recreate that process in patients."
Source: Invention
Intelligence, July - August 2007